Lord Howard was appointed Governor of Virginia in 1683. His family relocated there in February 1684, and Howard lived primarily at
Rosegill plantation in
Middlesex County. Howard commenced his duties as Governor on 16 April 1684. (The previous governor,
Thomas Colepeper, 2nd Baron Colepeper, had departed suddenly in 1683. He was replaced by acting Governor
Nicholas Spencer, Culpepper's cousin, agent, and president of the council, until Lord Howard's arrival nine months later.) On 23 June 1684, Lord Howard sailed from Virginia for
Albany, New York with his daughter, Philadelphia, where he and New York Governor
Thomas Dongan brokered a July peace treaty with members of the
Iroquois Confederacy. The treaty succeeded in ending a series of raids by the westernmost
Seneca nation, whose warriors had traveled south to the frontier of Virginia. Although the Iroquois admitted to breaking the
Covenant Chain, Howard and Dongan refrained from demanding reparations in hopes that they would continue attacks against the British rivals in
New France. While in New York, Howard and his daughter stayed at Dongan's house and spent much of their time socialising. Lady Howard arrived in Virginia, but died the next year on 13 August 1685 at age 31. Their daughter, Margaret Frances, died while accompanying Lady Howard's body, being transported for return to England. Despite his negotiation efforts, Howard was unpopular among Virginians. He ordered that no one in the colony could use a
printing press for any reason and tried to gain the power to overturn laws and levy taxes. ==Late life==